Wednesday, March 06, 2019

Wednesday Morning Links

Miscellaneous material for your mid-week reading.

- Yves Engler writes that the Libs' SNC-Lavalin scandal represents a fully expected consequence of a foreign policy based on acquiescing in corruption:

...Trudeau went to bat for SNC after the firm had either
been found guilty or was alleged to have greased palms in Libya,
Bangladesh, Algeria, India, Kazakhstan, Tunisia, Angola, Nigeria,
Mozambique, Ghana, Malawi, Uganda, Cambodia and Zambia (as well as
Québec). A 2013 CBC/Globe & Mail investigation of a
small Oakville, Ontario-based division of SNC uncovered suspicious
payments to government officials in connection with 13 international
development projects. In each case between five and 10 per cent of
costs were recorded as “‘project consultancy cost,’ sometimes ‘project
commercial cost,’ but [the] real fact is the intention is [a] bribe,” a
former SNC engineer, Mohammad Ismail, told the CBC.

While the media has covered the company’s corruption and lobbying for
a deferred prosecution agreement, they have barely mentioned SNC’s
global importance or influence over Canadian foreign policy. Canada’s
preeminent “disaster capitalist” corporation, SNC has worked on projects
in most countries around the world. From constructing Canada’s Embassy in Haiti to Chinese nuclear centres, to military camps in Afghanistan and pharmaceutical factories in Belgium, the sun never sets on SNC.
...
SNC has been one of the largest corporate recipients of Canadian “aid.”
The company has had entire departments dedicated to applying for
Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), UN and World Bank
funded projects. SNC’s first international contract, in 1963 in India,
was financed by Canadian aid and led to further work in that country. In
the late 1960s the firm was hired to manage CIDA offices in African
countries where Canada had no diplomatic representation. In the late
1980s CIDA contracted
SNC to produce a feasibility study for the Three Gorges Dam, which
displaced more than a million Chinese. During the occupation of
Afghanistan CIDA contracted SNC to carry out its $50 million “signature project” to repair the Dahla dam on the Arghandab River in Kandahar province ($10 million was spent on private security for the dam).
...
Even SNC’s use of bribery has a made-in-Ottawa tint. For years Canada
lagged behind the rest of the G7 countries in criminalizing foreign
bribery. For example, into the early 1990s, Canadian companies were at
liberty to deduct bribes paid to foreign officials from their taxes,
affording them an “advantage
over the Americans”, according to Bernard Lamarre former head of
Lavalin (now SNC Lavalin). In 1991, Bernard, the older brother to SNC
Lavalin’s subsequent head Jacques Lamarre, told Maclean’s that
he always demanded a receipt when paying international bribes. “I make
sure we get a signed invoice,” he said. “And payment is always in the
form of a cheque, not cash, so we can claim it on our income tax!”
...
As the recent scandal demonstrates — and the Financial Post noted years ago — SNC has “considerable lobbying power in Ottawa.” Placing its CEO among the 50 “Top People Influencing Canadian Foreign Policy”, Embassy
magazine described SNC as “one of the country’s most active companies
internationally”, which “works closely with the government.” The
now-defunct weekly concluded, “whoever is heading it is a major player”
in shaping Canadian foreign policy.

And, as it turns out, in shaping the way things are now done at home in Ottawa.

- Brett Christophers points out the UK's massive selloff of public land, while recognizing that the result is the loss not only of common wealth but also of uses tied to public stewardship.

- Vaughn Palmer comments on the finding of a B.C. scientific panel that the province has failed to collect even basic information about the risks posed by an environmentally-destructive and poorly-regulated fracking industry. And Robyn Allan points out why whoever wins power in Alberta's provincial election needs to come to grips with the fact that the tar sands are a declining economic sector.

- Don Pittis writes about the prospect that small communities can serve as centres for technological development in order to avoid the further congestion of urban areas.

- Finally, Corey Robin discusses the need for a challenge to neoliberalism in the economic discipline to address philosophical issues as well as policy choices.